Squire Whipple
Squire Whipple was a civil engineer born in Hardwick, Massachusetts, USA. His family moved to New York when he was thirteen. He received his secondary education at the Fairfield Academy in Herkimer, New York, and graduated from Union College in New York after only one year.
Squire Whipple, a U.S. civil engineer, inventor, and theoretician who provided the first scientifically based rules for bridge construction.
Squire Whipple was a civil engineer born in Hardwick, Massachusetts, USA. His family moved to New York when he was thirteen. He received his secondary education at the Fairfield Academy in Herkimer, New York, and graduated from Union College in New York after only one year.
After graduating from Union College, Schenectady, N.Y., in 1830, Whipple conducted surveys for several railroad and canal projects and made surveying instruments. In 1840 he invented a lock for weighing canal boats. In the next years he turned his attention to bridges and invented two new truss designs employing iron as well as timber; in 1853 he completed an iron railroad bridge of 146-foot (44-metre) span near West Troy (now Watervliet), N.Y. In the following year appeared his Work on Bridge Building, the first significant attempt to supply a theoretical means for calculating stresses in place of the rule-of-thumb methods then in general practice. The book, which he expanded and personally printed in 1869 under the title An Elementary and Practical Treatise on Bridge Building, facilitated the rational use of wrought and cast iron and was widely used in railroad engineering for decades.
Squire Whipple
Date of Birth: 16 Sep 1804
Birth Place: Hardwick, Massachusetts, United States
Proffession: Civil engineer
Nationality: United States
Death: 15 March 1888, Albany, New York, United States